CDC’s director resisted Oster, saying that he would not resign
A few weeks after the job on Wednesday afternoon, Susan Monarez, who was ousted as the director of the CDC, said that he was not dismissed after hours and would not resign.
The Department of Health and Human Services (HHS) posted a statement on X. Towards Ter, EST AST said “Susan Monarez is not the director of the disease control and prevention centers.”
Less than two hours later, DC Attorney Mark Zaid Monarez released an opposition statement.
“When CDC Director Susan Monarez Rubber-Stamp denied the Rubber-Stamp, the director of the CDC denied the reckless instructions and the dedication of the fire, he chose to protect the public to give a political agenda. He was targeted,” the statement said.
“Dr. Monarez did not resign from the White House to resign or did not get notice, and he would not resign as a dedicated person to honesty and science.”
According to the New York Times, HHS Secretary Robert F. Kennedy Jr. on Monday asked to resign or dismiss the vaccine policy.
Instead, the Monarez Army Health Committee Chairman reached Sen.
A source, familiar with the situation, confirmed the hill earlier on Wednesday that Monarez was ousted as the director of the CDC. Senate confirmed him on July 23 after President Trump nominated him for this role.
After the role of the Covid -1 epidemic, Monarez was the first CDC director after becoming increasingly politics, needing confirmation of the Senate.
The Washington Post first told Manarage firing.
Hours after the news decreased, four senior CDC officials quoted their weapons of public health agencies under Kennedy and announced their resignation to colleagues in emails.
Debra Houri, chief medical officer of the CDC, wrote in his resignation letter, “CDC’s science should never censor or interpretation or interpretation for the good of the nation and the world.
“Recently, the cost of risk oversteating and incorrect information has been spent on the rise, as it has been displayed by the largest number of ham cases in the United States in 30 years and violent attacks on our agency.”
Before being nominated to lead the CDC, Marriage II served as the director of the CDC after the start of the Trump administration. He previously served as Deputy Director at the Advanced Research Projects Agency for health.
President Trump chose Manej as the second choice after his first choice, the former Rep Reps of Florida. David Weldon (R), failed to gain enough GOP support.
Four months after Trump announced that he was nominated four months after he chose his true social.
He came to this role with enlightened praise from ex-colleague who described him as a great coordinator of “data-driven, non-partitions” and non-private partnerships near the hill. During his time as the director of the acting CDC, it was reported that Monarez did not put back the instruction to remove the CDC pages containing the “LGBBTU” and “Transgender” terms and did not try to save important information.
A former colleague said that Monarez was not someone who would like to help break the CDC and assume that he was practically acting in order to alleviate a wide attack on existing information.
Brett Girwar, a health and former acting Food and Drug Administration (FDA), said, “Monarez was probably chosen for the purpose of providing a purpose, data and science-driven evaluation of the potential policies and operational changes that are currently being considered.”
During the hearing of his Senate confirmation, Monarez lightly tried, sometimes the distance between himself and Kennedy’s opinion. He believed that “vaccines saved lives” and said that he had not seen any causal connection between autism and vaccination, Kennedy had long estimated.
When pressed by Democratic Sen Sen Angela Albrocks (Md), he approved the fluoridation of the water, saying he believed that it was safe to drink fluoridated water in his own Maryland community. Before his confirmation, Kennedy said that the Trump administration would suggest that the water system removed the cavity-resistant mineral.
But when he was pressured by Senators on whether he would break through Kennedy, Monarez avoided answering directly, instead said, “If I am confirmed as the director of the CDC, I have to support the Secretary with science and proof and confirmed that I am giving him the best information for these critical decisions.”
Updated at 7:55 in the evening